India’s business schools to teach about karma and the Mahabharata

Ethics and morals have arrived at India's business schools. Source: Shutterstock

THE Indian government has a plan to instil “good values” in the country’s future business leaders through a new course on Indian ethics and concepts, the Hindustan Times reported.

Beyond the usual lessons on finance, marketing, accounting and economics, business students in India can expect to learn about religious texts as well as Kautilya’s Arthashastra, an ancient treatise on statecraft, economic policy and military strategy.

“The scandals of Satyam, NSEL crisis, Sahara fiasco, and increasing trend of wilful loan defaulters to banks, huge deposits made by a few business firms/individuals during demonetisation expose the weak foundations of ethics and values in Indian business scenarios,” the course outline says.

'AICTE to include Vedas, Bible, Quran in MBA courses'. Will it be made relevant to biz mgmt. Or just like that! https://t.co/N4dfw8C2Uf

The All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), the regulator for technical institutes and business schools in the country, had drawn up the revised curriculum, which is mandatory for all business schools, excluding Indian Institutes for Management.

Starting this year, the “Indian ethos and business ethics” course will teach the “gurukul” system of learning as well as karma, the ancient Hindu spiritual principle of cause and effect, where what one intends and does will affect his or her future.

Management lessons will also be extracted from the religious holy books, such as the Vedas, the Mahabharata, the Bible and the Quran.

Indian business schools aren’t alone in revising their curriculum to address the challenges of its time.

At the Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, US, professor Tim Vargus includes Uber and its “bro culture” in his syllabus. Classroom debate centres around the start-up’s sensational business success and rampant corporate misbehaviour.

For assignments in Soule’s class, students are tasked to discuss sexual harassment at Uber, the social justice protests by National Football League players and how companies like Amazon respond when attacked by US President Trump.

“Up until now, business leaders were largely responsible for delivering products. Now, shareholders are looking to corporate leaders to make statements on what would traditionally have been social justice or moral issues.”